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Watchtower

A process for watching your Docker containers and automatically restarting them whenever their base image is refreshed.

Overview

Watchtower is an application that will monitor your running Docker containers and watch for changes to the images that those containers were originally started from. If watchtower detects that an image has changed, it will automatically restart the container using the new image.

With watchtower you can update the running version of your containerized app simply by pushing a new image to the Docker Hub or your own image registry. Watchtower will pull down your new image, gracefully shut down your existing container and restart it with the same options that were used when it was deployed initially.

For example, let's say you were running watchtower along with an instance of centurylink/wetty-cli image:

Every few minutes watchtower will pull the latest centurylink/wetty-cli image and compare it to the one that was used to run the "wetty" container. If it sees that the image has changed it will stop/remove the "wetty" container and then restart it using the new image and the same docker run options that were used to start the container initially (in this case, that would include the -p 8080:3000 port mapping).

Usage

Watchtower is itself packaged as a Docker container so installation is as simple as pulling the v2tec/watchtower image.

Since the watchtower code needs to interact with the Docker API in order to monitor the running containers, you need to mount /var/run/docker.sock into the container with the -v flag when you run it.

If pulling images from private Docker registries, supply registry authentication credentials with the environment variables REPO_USER and REPO_PASS
or by mounting the host's docker config file into the container (at the root of the container filesystem /).

If you mount the config file as described below, be sure to also prepend the url for the registry when starting up your watched image (you can omit the https://). Here is a complete docker-compose.yml file that starts up a docker container from a private repo at dockerhub and monitors it with watchtower. Note the command argument changing the interval to 30s rather than the default 5 minutes.

Arguments

By default, watchtower will monitor all containers running within the Docker daemon to which it is pointed (in most cases this will be the local Docker daemon, but you can override it with the --host option described in the next section). However, you can restrict watchtower to monitoring a subset of the running containers by specifying the container names as arguments when launching watchtower.

In the example above, watchtower will only monitor the containers named "nginx" and "redis" for updates -- all of the other running containers will be ignored.

When no arguments are specified, watchtower will monitor all running containers.

Options

Any of the options described below can be passed to the watchtower process by setting them after the image name in the docker run string:

docker run --rm v2tec/watchtower --help

--host, -h Docker daemon socket to connect to. Defaults to "unix:///var/run/docker.sock" but can be pointed at a remote Docker host by specifying a TCP endpoint as "tcp://hostname:port". The host value can also be provided by setting the DOCKER_HOST environment variable.

--schedule, -sCron expression in 6 fields (rather than the traditional 5) which defines when and how often to check for new images. Either --interval or the schedule expression could be defined, but not both. An example: --schedule "0 0 4 * * *"

--no-pull Do not pull new images. When this flag is specified, watchtower will not attempt to pull new images from the registry. Instead it will only monitor the local image cache for changes. Use this option if you are building new images directly on the Docker host without pushing them to a registry.

--stop-timeout Timeout before the container is forcefully stopped. When set, this option will change the default (10s) wait time to the given value. An example: --stop-timeout 30s will set the timeout to 30 seconds.

--label-enable Watch containers where the com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable label is set to true.

--cleanup Remove old images after updating. When this flag is specified, watchtower will remove the old image after restarting a container with a new image. Use this option to prevent the accumulation of orphaned images on your system as containers are updated.

--tlsverify Use TLS when connecting to the Docker socket and verify the server's certificate.

--debug Enable debug mode. When this option is specified you'll see more verbose logging in the watchtower log file.

--help Show documentation about the supported flags.

See below for options used to configure notifications.

Linked Containers

Watchtower will detect if there are links between any of the running containers and ensure that things are stopped/started in a way that won't break any of the links. If an update is detected for one of the dependencies in a group of linked containers, watchtower will stop and start all of the containers in the correct order so that the application comes back up correctly.

For example, imagine you were running a mysql container and a wordpress container which had been linked to the mysql container. If watchtower were to detect that the mysql container required an update, it would first shut down the linked wordpress container followed by the mysql container. When restarting the containers it would handle mysql first and then wordpress to ensure that the link continued to work.

Stopping Containers

When watchtower detects that a running container needs to be updated it will stop the container by sending it a SIGTERM signal.
If your container should be shutdown with a different signal you can communicate this to watchtower by setting a label named com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.stop-signal with the value of the desired signal.

This label can be coded directly into your image by using the LABEL instruction in your Dockerfile:

If you need to only include only some containers, pass the --label-enable flag on startup and set the com.centurylinklabs.watchtower.enable label with a value of true for the containers you want to watch.

Remote Hosts

By default, watchtower is set-up to monitor the local Docker daemon (the same daemon running the watchtower container itself). However, it is possible to configure watchtower to monitor a remote Docker endpoint. When starting the watchtower container you can specify a remote Docker endpoint with either the --host flag or the DOCKER_HOST environment variable:

Note in both of the examples above that it is unnecessary to mount the /var/run/docker.sock into the watchtower container.

Secure Connections

Watchtower is also capable of connecting to Docker endpoints which are protected by SSL/TLS. If you've used docker-machine to provision your remote Docker host, you simply need to volume mount the certificates generated by docker-machine into the watchtower container and optionally specify --tlsverify flag.

The docker-machine certificates for a particular host can be located by executing the docker-machine env command for the desired host (note the values for the DOCKER_HOST and DOCKER_CERT_PATH environment variables that are returned from this command). The directory containing the certificates for the remote host needs to be mounted into the watchtower container at /etc/ssl/docker.

With the certificates mounted into the watchtower container you need to specify the --tlsverify flag to enable verification of the certificate:

Updating Watchtower

If watchtower is monitoring the same Docker daemon under which the watchtower container itself is running (i.e. if you volume-mounted /var/run/docker.sock into the watchtower container) then it has the ability to update itself. If a new version of the v2tec/watchtower image is pushed to the Docker Hub, your watchtower will pull down the new image and restart itself automatically.

Notifications

Watchtower can send notifications when containers are updated. Notifications are sent via hooks in the logging system, logrus.
The types of notifications to send are passed via the comma-separated option --notifications (or corresponding environment variable WATCHTOWER_NOTIFICATIONS), which has the following valid values:

email to send notifications via e-mail

slack to send notifications through a Slack webhook

msteams to send notifications via MSTeams webhook

Settings

--notifications-level (env. WATCHTOWER_NOTIFICATIONS_LEVEL): Controls the log level which is used for the notifications. If omitted, the default log level is info. Possible values are: panic, fatal, error, warn, info or debug.

Notifications via E-Mail

To receive notifications by email, the following command-line options, or their corresponding environment variables, can be set:

--notification-email-from (env. WATCHTOWER_NOTIFICATION_EMAIL_FROM): The e-mail address from which notifications will be sent.

--notification-email-to (env. WATCHTOWER_NOTIFICATION_EMAIL_TO): The e-mail address to which notifications will be sent.

Notifications through Slack webhook

To receive notifications in Slack, add slack to the --notifications option or the WATCHTOWER_NOTIFICATIONS environment variable.

Additionally, you should set the Slack webhook url using the --notification-slack-hook-url option or the WATCHTOWER_NOTIFICATION_SLACK_HOOK_URL environment variable.

By default, watchtower will send messages under the name watchtower, you can customize this string through the --notification-slack-identifier option or the WATCHTOWER_NOTIFICATION_SLACK_IDENTIFIER environment variable.